A donation page is available here. Robert: Eventually that conviction was overturned on appeal because in general the things that are said in a jury room are protected. But beneath their unassuming catcher’s-mitt shell, they harbor a half-billion-year-old secret: a superpower that helped them outlive the dinosaurs and survive all the Earth’s mass extinctions. Part war game part choose your own adventure, Rosa’s Transition Integrity Project doesn’t give us any predictions, and it isn’t a referendum on Trump. It is specifically about ... It’s specifically about taking the Radiolab approach and applying it to stories and people that land in front of the Supreme Court.

Robert: Julian, I'm going to interrupt you there and just say, I think we're probably best off just ending the conversation and letting our microphone person go home and letting me-- [crosstalk]. I was getting kind of restless. It was like being somehow visited by some weird Masonic ... What is your first reaction? On top of that, to add all this additional audio production that you like to do and — it’s kind of the signature of the show.

Would he simply refuse to leave office, or even try to use the military to maintain control? Baytna Baytak, a charity that provided free housing to health care workers during the coronavirus pandemic, is now raising funds with Impact Lebanon to shelter those who have been displaced. Security Moms. And what is that secret superpower? I didn't have a ride to the courthouse, and so I called the court and ask them if I really had to show up since I didn't have a ride.

Straight from MIT’s research files, this image shows microglia who have gotten light stimulation therapy (one can only hope in the flicker room). There’s too many things happening.”. I forget his name. Season 3 about Constitutional amendments that determine who gets to vote. In addition to having an awesome name, you are the co-host of Radiolab. Tracy: We actually sent a reporter to Denver to talk to this guy. What about the surprisingly swingable corners of this country without a soccer mom in sight? We are working to provide transcripts for as much of … Listen 50:00. Ellie: The X-men. Prosecuted. This episode was reported by Simon Adler with help from Tracie Hunte and was produced by Simon Adler with help from Bethel Habte. It’s like one of the most cliched ways in which we open the show.

To visit the Hospitality Flag website: https://declaremississippi.com/. Eighteen-year-olds at the time argued that if they were old enough to be drafted to fight in the War, they were old enough to have a voice in our democracy. You can read more about Fadi’s trips and see his photographs at lebanonusa.com or on his Instagram at @lebanonusa. Don’t shoot me, please. Want more Radiolab in your life? When podcasting came along, suddenly Radiolab just made a hell of a lot more sense. Its on-the-ground team is also counseling children traumatized by the blast. Jeffrey: I don't, and maybe that's because I've served on a bunch of juries. Yeah, no, I do think that all of the public radio refugee podcasts do have similar DNA in that we’re all trying to tell those really super narrative, surprising, character-driven stories where there’s some transformation moment. Multi-sensory Gamma Stimulation Ameliorates Alzheimer’s-Associated Pathology and Improves Cognition. Be sure to check out Kerning Cultures at their website www.kerningcultures.com, instagram @kerningcultures, or twitter @kerningcultures. And from these answers they’ve written a rulebook that all 2.2 billion of us are expected to follow. Robert: Yes, but you can make those same arguments on the other side. Eighteen-year-olds at the time argued that if they were old enough to be drafted to fight in the War, they were old enough to have a voice in our democracy.

I do like a David Foster Wallace thing with multiple footnotes, and he’s talking to the reader at the same time. There’s just something deeply pleasing to me about that. Those neon green things in the image are microglia, the brain’s immune cells, or, as we describe them in our episode, the janitor cells of the brain. Ellie Mystal: I am an editor of Above the Law and the legal editor of More Perfect on WNYC. 3 years ago. This is throwing me off a bit. We're supposed to just say whether she broke the law or not. They’re so interesting. If you haven’t, please consider helping everyone understand this presidential election: Contribute today from as little as $3. Judge: Are you guilty as you stand in the matter and form as for said or not guilty? That’s probably more true than I would like it to be.

You can find the original episode, .

How do you actually make change in the world? Ellie: That's just a fact of their existence.

Like if I’m interviewing you for a story, I need to interview four other people to make sure I can in a sense understand where you land in the context. We decided that you did, and we hope and we pray that this is a system that works, and that you are getting justice." Robert: That would be the thing that you just said. Does the fact that this is sort of happening ... It’s in public and obviously the deliberations are private, but does the fact that so much of this is sort of happening offstage give you guys a lot more freedom?

Then the show grows and more people get added. Today, a hidden power that is either the cornerstone of our democracy or a trapdoor to anarchy. This episode was reported and produced by Annie McEwen. It was just you and the person listening. For me, the answer became no. We use cookies on our website to improve your user experience and to collect statistical data such as number of unique visitors and time spent on our website. It was really just a proof of concept, like, “Can we do this?

If you can't convict a cop when you know he did it, when you saw him do it, when you can't convict the cop who shot when we can't even indict the cop who choked Eric Gardner to death in broad daylight. First, they fill up the box with 12 jurors and then they ask them questions about themselves. Because I would figure you would get grief from time to time, but I would also think, boy, you spend a lot of time on any one of these things” — we’re talking about more than a year — that it wouldn’t be like something you’d sort of casually slap together and then have to regret after the moment. Special thanks to Stephen Wiesenfeld, Alison Keith, and Bob Darcy.

He says the opening shots of that battle go all the way back to--. Now if they're going to try and do it, I want them killed.

Okay, I’ll see if I can split the difference. We are working to provide transcripts for as much of … I’m not at Vox Media today. of the global pandemic. Host of Radiolab Jad Abumrad tells how his search for an answer led him home to the mountains of Tennessee, where he met an unexpected teacher: Dolly Parton. It was a constitution of sorts, laying out what could and what couldn’t be posted on the site. You have that kind of liberty. Laura: To me, I just couldn't get beyond that. 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Radiolab Null and Void Should a juror be able to ignore the law? When I talked to him he never said anything like that, I'm so sorry.

Now we're in the mood. That would happen here and there, but no, not really, because I could say to them what I just said to you which is like, “Actually, it’s not like that much money.”. Go look at the Supreme Court docket. I know. But that still left DC without full representation in Congress; D.C. sends a "non-voting delegate" to the House.